Ogden/Fairmount, Inc. v. Illinois Racing Board

332 N.E.2d 610, 30 Ill. App. 3d 707, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2678
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 21, 1975
DocketNo. 74-193
StatusPublished

This text of 332 N.E.2d 610 (Ogden/Fairmount, Inc. v. Illinois Racing Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ogden/Fairmount, Inc. v. Illinois Racing Board, 332 N.E.2d 610, 30 Ill. App. 3d 707, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2678 (Ill. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE EBERSPACHER

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal by the defendant, Illinois Racing Board (hereinafter “Board”), from orders entered by the circuit courts of Madison and St. Clair Counties reversing those portions of defendant Board’s order which attached as a condition to the 1974 racing licenses granted the plaintiffs, Ogden/Fairmount, Inc., and East St. Louis Jockey Club, Inc., that plaintiffs not be permitted to charge more than 35 cents for their programs.

Each of the plaintiffs applied to the defendant Board for a racing license for the 1974 racing season. Defendant Board issued an order granting racing dates to the plaintiffs; however, attached to such grants were certain conditions, which included the condition that plaintiffs not charge more than 35 cents for their programs. The imposition of this condition was apparently premised on the defendant Board’s finding that:

“Total attendance has generally declined at all racing meetings in IHinois in recent years, partially as a result of increases in prices for admissions, parking, programs, and concessions, and the reduction of quality in racing programs at thoroughbred meetings, despite the addition of gimmick wagering.”

As a result of this finding the defendant Board concluded:

“The prices of admissions, parking, programs, and concession sales at aU race tracks in IHinois have been sufficiently high in recent years to constitute one of the causes of the decline in attendance at both thoroughbred and harness meetings. Consequently, no applicants licensed in IHinois in 1974 wiH be permitted to raise any of their prices over 1973 levels without specific prior approval from the Board; and, East St. Louis Jockey Club, Inc. and Ogden/Fairmount, Inc., as a condition of receiving 1974 racing Hcenses, wHl not be permitted to charge more than thirty-five cents for their programs.”

Thereafter, the defendant Board ordered, among other things, that:

“9. The licenses to be issued to Ogden/Fairmount, Inc. and East St. Louis Jockey Club, Inc. are conditioned upon the requirement that the prices to be charged for the programs to be sold by these two associations be no greater than thirty-five cents.
# # #
32. As a condition to the issuance to all of the above listed applicants to whom dates have been allotted, no such applicant may charge a price for any goods or services during 1974 in excess of the price charged for the same goods and services in 1973 without specific prior approval from the Board.”

Subsequently, the plaintiffs each filed a complaint for administrative review alleging that the action of the defendant Board was illegal. The plaintiffs presented the following reasons for reversal of defendant Board’s actions:

(1) that the Legislature did not grant to the Board the power to regulate or control prices of admission, parking, programs and concessions;
(2) that Rule 79(a) (Thoroughbred Racing) and 5.32 (Harness Racing) requiring the Board to approve prices on admission, goods or services provided are illegal and unauthorized;
(3) that Rule 79(a) and 5.32 are unconstitutional because they do not contain adequate standards, criteria or procedures for the determination of reasonable prices, thereby denying the plaintiffs rights to due process and equal protection under the law;
(4) that such rules are arbitrary and capricious;
(5) that the Board’s decision and order is arbitrary and capricious as it pertains to the plaintiffs;
(6) that the Board’s decision deprives the plaintiffs of their property without due process of law;
(7) that the decision of the Board is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence; and
(8) that the decision of the Board is discriminatory because it only applies to the plaintiffs.

The trial court after hearing arguments in each of the cases for administrative review, entered its orders reversing certain portions of defendant Board’s order. Since the trial court’s orders are substantially the same, we only find it necessary to set forth the pertinent portions of the order entered in favor of plaintiff Ogden/Fairmount, Inc. Before entering the “Order and Judgment of the Court,” the trial court made the following findings:

“1. That the Rule of the Illinois Racing Board, Thoroughbred 79A, adopted on October 9, 1973, in relation to the approval by the Board of prices charged by the licensee, is in effect a rule giving the Board authority to fix prices; that said Rule has not been authorized by any legislative act, nor has any criteria, standards, or guidelines been fixed by the Legislature as to prices and the enactment of said Rule is not within the authority of said Board,
2. That the Legislature cannot delegate its legislative authority without establishing controls or standards, and cannot give to the Illinois Racing Board, the unlimited discretion to act when that discretion is not guided by standards under which it can be intelligently exercised.
3. That the findings, dated 12/18/73 and affirmed 2/15/74, of the Board, in its Order, on page 9, paragraph 25, the conclusions in said Order, on page 11, paragraph 3, and the Order, on page 14, paragraph 9, and on page 17, paragraph 32, are without basis in law; and are founded on an arbitrary exercise of discretion without a hearing as to said matters and cannot be used to impose the conditions to granting of a license to the plaintiff.
4. That the findings of paragraph 25, page 9, is contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, and based on pure conclusions, and could form no basis for the condition attached to the issuance of a license to plaintiff.
5. That paragraph 3 of the Conclusions in said Order, on page 11, is arbitrary and discriminatory as being imposed only on plaintiff and Caholda Downs.
6. That plaintiff has not been accorded due process in that no proper hearing was accorded to plaintiff either in the formulation, or reasonableness of prices.”

The trial court then concluded that that portion of defendant Board’s order which granted plaintiff Ogden/Fairmount, Inc., a license to conduct 75 days of racing should be approved and affirmed and that that portion of such order which attached the condition that plaintiff Ogden/ Fairmount, Inc., not be permitted to charge more than 35 cents should be reversed and such provision be stricken from the defendant Board’s order and held for naught. A similar analysis yielded a like result with respect to plaintiff East St. Louis Jockey Club, Inc.’s “Complaint” for administrative review. The defendant Board has perfected appeals from the entry of each of the orders of the trial court and the cases have been consolidated on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
332 N.E.2d 610, 30 Ill. App. 3d 707, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 2678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogdenfairmount-inc-v-illinois-racing-board-illappct-1975.